Quiz Pathshala
Teacher Dashboard

Powerful Features for Smarter Quiz Management

Create quizzes, manage access, control quiz rules, schedule attempts, and track student performance from one clean dashboard built for teachers and educators.

Quiz Controls

Configure quiz rules, marks, timing, and attempts with full flexibility.

Time Limit

Set quiz time limits to create a more focused and exam-like experience for students.

Number of Questions

Decide how many questions should appear in a quiz based on your test format and difficulty.

Marks per Question

Assign marks for each question and build quizzes with flexible scoring rules.

Negative Marking

Enable or disable negative marking and define penalty marks for wrong answers.

Attempt Limit

Limit how many times a student can attempt a quiz to maintain fairness and control.

Access & Security

Control who can access your quizzes and when they can attempt them.

Quiz Access Code

Protect private quizzes with a unique access code so only selected students can attempt them.

Block Student

Restrict selected students from attempting your quizzes whenever needed.

Schedule Quiz Availability

Set quiz start and end timing so students can attempt it only during the allowed period.

Results & Transparency

Monitor student performance and control answer visibility after quiz submission.

Track Student Attempts

See which students attempted your quiz and review scores, answers, and overall performance.

Answer Reveal Settings

Choose whether answers should be shown immediately after submission or on a later date.

Teacher FAQs

Common questions about the teacher dashboard and quiz controls.

You get access to the Teacher Dashboard where you can create quizzes, manage time limits, attempt limits, negative marking, access codes, scheduling, and reports.

Yes, quiz access depends on the rules you set. If the quiz is public, students can attempt it normally. If it is private, an access code may be required.

An access code helps you keep a quiz private and controlled. It is especially useful for coaching batches, classes, and restricted test environments.

It means you can set the start and end time for a quiz, so students can only attempt it during the allowed period.

You can decide whether answers should be shown immediately after submission or revealed later on a specific date and time.

No, it is not required. You can directly create questions inside a quiz.

Yes, you can enable both modes for the same quiz. Practice mode is useful for learning and revision, while Test mode is better for performance tracking because results are saved.

Practice mode is designed for self-learning and revision, and its results are not saved. Test mode is designed for formal attempts, and the results are saved for performance tracking.

Yes, you can choose whether a quiz should be publicly accessible or restricted. For private quizzes, you can also use an access code for additional control.

Yes, you can configure different timing rules for both modes. Practice mode can use a per-question timer, while Test mode can use a full quiz time limit.

Yes, you can control how many questions should appear in a quiz. This helps you create short practice sets or full-length mock tests based on your needs.

Yes, you can enable negative marking and define how many marks should be deducted for incorrect answers. You can also keep it disabled if you do not want penalty-based scoring.

Yes, you can set an attempt limit for each quiz. This is useful when you want to restrict repeated attempts and maintain fairness.

Once the quiz expires, students can no longer attempt it. This helps teachers maintain strict time-based access for scheduled tests.

Yes, the teacher dashboard allows you to track student attempts and review results. You can monitor scores, answers, and other attempt-related details.

Yes, you can block or restrict selected students from accessing your quizzes. This gives you more control over who can participate.

Yes, the dashboard is flexible enough for both use cases. You can create controlled tests for classroom evaluation and also create practice quizzes for revision.

Yes, you can create exam-oriented quizzes using time limits, question control, attempt limits, negative marking, and access restrictions to make the experience more structured.